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Is the Internal Revenue Service starting to police free speech in America?
Has it, in this administration of cronies and corruption, become an arm of the
White House, using tax law to squelch those who would question the president?
The IRS pursuit of All Saints Church in Pasadena makes you wonder if our tax
agency is turning itself into Big Brother.
On Oct. 31, 2004, the Rev. George F. Regas, a retired rector of All Saints,
returned to the pulpit to deliver a probing sermon on morality. He posed an
imaginary debate between Jesus on one side and John F. Kerry and President Bush
on the other. At the outset, he told his parishioners that "I don't intend
to tell you how to vote." He went on to describe how the Jesus he knew
from the Bible would have been saddened by the war in Iraq and the untended
poverty in the United States.
He imagined Jesus saying, "Shame on those conservative politicians in
the nation's Congress and in state legislatures who have for years so proudly
proclaimed their love for children when they were only fetuses but ignored their
needs after they were born." His Jesus rebuked Bush, saying, "Your
doctrine of pre-emptive war is a failed doctrine." The Los Angeles Times
reported his sermon as a "searing indictment" of the Bush policies
on Iraq.
On June 9, after the election, the IRS sent an initial letter to the church,
citing the newspaper article. This was part of some 60 inquiries launched by
the IRS into churches after the 2004 election, about three times the historic
average.
This is an era when Catholic priests and bishops are telling believers that
it is a sin to vote for Kerry or others who are pro-choice. Pat Robertson, the
president's ally, has called for the assassination of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.
Jerry Falwell, famed for his Moral Majority political operation, has routinely
lashed out at Democratic leaders from his pulpit. The Christian Coalition has
taken it a step further, distributing millions of slanted voter guides, all
designed to gin up a vote against Democrats. Republican tacticians like Karl
Rove now count the conservative evangelical churches as central to their political
base.
Yet there is no sign that the IRS is investigating right-wing churches as well
as All Saints. As the Rev. J. Edwin Bacon Jr., rector of All Saints, asked,
"I'm very interested to know whether the IRS is taking a look only at churches
that are critical of the war in Iraq, or also at the churches that are supportive
of the war and the president."
The church, sensibly, has decided to fight this inquisition in public. The
National Council of Churches and the National Association of Evangelicals have
come to the defense of All Saints Church. Notably silent have been prominent
right-wing church leaders whose sermons are often far more directly political
than anything Regas preached.
The All Saints investigation raises a profound threat to speech in the United
States. This is a president who employs religious language and often claims
a mandate from above for his policies. The president says his favorite philosopher
is Jesus.
But his policies directly offend the teachings we have from Jesus: waging aggressive
war in Iraq; providing tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans while cutting support
for the most vulnerable -- slashing health care, depriving the hungry of food
stamps, slashing student loans for those who need them. Most recently, he vowed
to issue his first veto to stop legislators from reviving the Army's standards
against torture.
Each of these policies offends basic morality. On each, ministers and rabbis
should be teaching, challenging their audiences to consider the terrible gulf
between the president's policies and the basic teachings of the Bible, the Quran
or the Torah.
The IRS pursuit of All Saints Church clearly will have the effect of chilling
that inquiry and muting that challenge. If the IRS becomes the country's political
police force, dissenters will face official investigation and possible indictment.
Democracy and freedom of speech will be crucified by the imperial legions of
the modern day.
It is vital that the IRS hear from religious and secular leaders. This president's
policies deserve debate. The church cannot turn its back on the society around
it. And this country doesn't need an inquisition run from the bureaucratic warrens
of the Internal Revenue Service.